Results tagged “news”

Journalism's Peanut Butter Cup Moment

I'm dreaming big here. It's aspirational, but here it is:

The next time there's a news event that grabs the world's attention -- from an uprising in the Middle East to the World Cup Finals -- newsrooms around the globe will be utilizing people, software, and ideas that came out of the Knight Foundation and Mozilla partnership, and their collaboration with news organizations. Stories and maps will be rich with semantic data. News will adapt to different devices and screen sizes instantly. Video and audio will be interactive, searchable, and multilingual -- all thanks to open-Web technologies.

Today marks a big step forward toward making this vision come to life for Mozilla, Mozillians, and the three-hundred million four-hundred million people that make up the global Mozilla community. This is also a big validation of the Mozilla Drumbeat concept: bringing artists, academics, lawyers, non-geeks of all stripes -- and now journalists -- into the work of keeping the Web open, fun, and generative for years to come.

This is a personally exciting moment because, for the last eight months, I've had the opportunity to do some brainstorming with folks at Mozilla about the future of the open Web. I've also spent a fair bit of time over the years working hands-on with news producers. Going back-and-forth between these two communities has led to more than few Reese's Peanut Butter Cup moments (you know, "two great tastes..."), which is elegantly explained in Mark's recent posts on Media, Freedom, and the Web.

If you're more of a chocolate and mint person, consider this:

  • Many news organizations are going through a period of significant change today.
  • There are entirely new news departments devoted to "news applications" and "data journalism."
  • These departments organizations have huge sizeable budgets and are making technology decisions that will reverberate for years to come. (Seriously, just ask any journalist why they still use Microsoft Access.)
  • For many everyday people, their primary experience of the Web is news.

This is why Mozilla cares and why it is investing in this opportunity to co-create new tools and news experiences that will benefit users and newsmakers. It is also an opportunity to nudge this ship -- news producers, news users, and the entire news-technology ecosystem -- further toward the open Web, something Mozilla cares deeply about protecting and cultivating.

If you want to help answer some of the big questions ahead, or just eavesdrop, you can follow along here as I do a bit of thinking out loud over the coming days. My colleagues at Mozilla -- Mark and Nathaniel -- will also be posting updates on their respective blogs. Last but not least, there's a project mailing list that you should subscribe to if you want to get involved.

Drop me a line if you have any questions.

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Do you think about linking? The BBC News linking policy...

Interesting conversation unfolding over on the BBC blog about the role of "linking" in BBC news stories. 

How often do you click on the external links we add to stories on the BBC News site?

How useful are they, and how could they be better?

One thing seems clear already - summed up by Henry, a contributor to one of the discussions I mentioned earlier: Our role as an archive and resource is becoming as important to many of you as the more traditional role of reporting the latest news headlines. You can help us work out what that means for our day-to-day work as journalists.

In the post, Steve Herrmann (editor of the BBC News website) continues his tradition of setting new standards for being open, innovative, and pushing his staff to embrace the fundamentally two-way nature of the Web (or else!).

Many of the publishers that I work with struggle with the question of how "aggregated news" and "news curation" fit into their content mix. However, Mr. Herrmann presents an alternate vision of a news ecosystem that editors, writers, and publishers must engage with to stay relevant. One can only hope that more organizations have these frank conversations with their readers about their changing relationships. 

So... What question is your organization asking about "linking?" How are the publishers that you're working with exploring their role in the larger ecosystem of news and information? Time to start asking these questions. 
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The New Media Metric: How Shareable is Your Content?


Light, but still interesting, article that asks "How sharable is your content?"

Study after study indicates that Americans have developed all kinds of new habits when it comes to consuming the news. But one key upward trend that tends to get overlooked in the fine print of these studies is how popular content-sharing has become.

As more examples surface of how people are taking "ownership" of the news that they share, I'm reminded of a piece I read once called "The Hidden (in Plain Sight) Persuaders" about the company BzzAgent and how people just want to have something to say at parties.

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